Libyan clashes causing untold grief for civilians

Thousands of people are sheltering in medical clinics and refugees and migrants remain exposed to the fighting

“The latest figure as of last night is 264 dead and 1,266 wounded,” a World Health Organization spokesperson says

"The immediate concern is for about 3,600 refugees that are currently trapped in some of the detention centres"

TRIPOLI, Libya - Civlians are still being killed and injured since fighting began near the Libyan capital Tripoli nearly 3 weeks ago.

Thousands of people are sheltering in medical clinics and refugees and migrants remain exposed to the fighting.

"The latest figure as of last night is 264 dead and 1,266 wounded," World Health Organization (WHO) spokesperson Tarik Jasarevic told journalists on Tuesday.

Twenty one civilians have died and 69 have died in the past three weeks, he said.

There are concerns the conflict between the UN-recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) and the self-styled Libyan National Army (LNA), led by General Khalifa Haftar, risks becoming a quagmire.

Echoing those fears, UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) spokesperson, Babar Baloch, appealed for humanitarian access to thousands of refugees and migrants believed trapped in State-run detention centres south of the capital.

"Our concern is for some 6,000 who still remain in detention in some of the detention locations," Mr. Baloch said Tuesday, "but also the immediate concern is for about 3,600 refugees that are currently trapped in some of the detention centres which are very close to where the fighting is taking place now."

In the past two weeks, UNHCR has moved 541 vulnerable refugees from the detention centres of Ain Zara, Qasr Bin Ghashir, Abu Selim and Janzour, to a safe location in central Tripoli. These detention centres are in "areas which are very close to the ongoing fighting and clashes", the spokesman explained.

And despite fighting and access problems, the agency evacuated more than 160 refugees from Libya to Niger last Friday, Mr. Baloch said.

To respond to growing needs – and some 32,000 people displaced by the violence - WHO is recruiting additional specialized emergency medical teams to be deployed to Tripoli-area hospitals.

"WHO staff have been visiting health clinics in areas where large numbers of displaced people are sheltering, to ensure that those health facilities have what they need to treat the displaced," Mr. Jasarevic said, while noting that 11 ambulances have so far been damaged since the onset of fighting, in contravention of international humanitarian law.

Amid "rapidly increasing" needs in Libya caused by military engagement and a lack of safety guarantees, the UN’s humanitarian coordinating arm, OCHA, appealed for far greater international support.

"Through the Tripoli Flash Appeal, the humanitarian community urgently calls for $10.2 million to continue its work in helping conflict-affected people in Libya," OCHA said in a statement, noting that just six per cent of the total had been received.